Genetically based differentiation in growth of multiple non-native plant species along a steep environmental gradient
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In: Oecologia, Vol. 170, No. 1, 01.09.2012, p. 89-99.
Research output: Journal contributions › Journal articles › Research › peer-review
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TY - JOUR
T1 - Genetically based differentiation in growth of multiple non-native plant species along a steep environmental gradient
AU - Haider, Sylvia
AU - Kueffer, Christoph
AU - Edwards, Peter J.
AU - Alexander, Jake M.
N1 - Funding Information: Acknowledgments We would like to thank L. Trepl for helpful comments during the project and H. Dietz who was strongly involved in the initial phase of the project. Comments of three anonymous reviewers helped to improve earlier versions of the manuscript. We are grateful to the Grassland Group, the Chair of Plant Nutrition, the experimental station in Dürnast and the Ecotoxicology Group of the Technische Universität München for providing climate chambers and greenhouses. We thank R. Otto and B. Schreck for collecting seeds and finally we are very grateful to all the people who helped during the experiment. The experiment complies with current German laws. SH was funded by graduate scholarships of Universität Bayern e. V. and the HWP-program of the Technische Universität München.
PY - 2012/9/1
Y1 - 2012/9/1
N2 - A non-native plant species spreading along an environmental gradient may need to adjust its growth to the prevailing conditions that it encounters by a combination of phenotypic plasticity and genetic adaptation. There have been several studies of how non-native species respond to changing environmental conditions along latitudinal gradients, but much less is known about elevational gradients. We conducted a climate chamber experiment to investigate plastic and genetically based growth responses of 13 herbaceous non-native plants along an elevational gradient from 100 to 2,000 m a. s. l. in Tenerife. Conditions in the field ranged from high anthropogenic disturbance but generally favourable temperatures for plant growth in the lower half of the gradient, to low disturbance but much cooler conditions in the upper half. We collected seed from low, mid and high elevations and grew them in climate chambers under the characteristic temperatures at these three elevations. Growth of all species was reduced under lower temperatures along both halves of the gradient. We found consistent genetically based differences in growth over the upper elevational gradient, with plants from high-elevation sites growing more slowly than those from mid-elevation ones, while the pattern in the lower part of the gradient was more mixed. Our data suggest that many non-native plants might respond to climate along elevational gradients by genetically based changes in key traits, especially at higher elevations where low temperatures probably impose a stronger selection pressure. At lower elevations, where anthropogenic influences are greater, higher gene flow and frequent disturbance might favour genotypes with broad ecological amplitudes. Thus the importance of evolutionary processes for invasion success is likely to be context-dependent.
AB - A non-native plant species spreading along an environmental gradient may need to adjust its growth to the prevailing conditions that it encounters by a combination of phenotypic plasticity and genetic adaptation. There have been several studies of how non-native species respond to changing environmental conditions along latitudinal gradients, but much less is known about elevational gradients. We conducted a climate chamber experiment to investigate plastic and genetically based growth responses of 13 herbaceous non-native plants along an elevational gradient from 100 to 2,000 m a. s. l. in Tenerife. Conditions in the field ranged from high anthropogenic disturbance but generally favourable temperatures for plant growth in the lower half of the gradient, to low disturbance but much cooler conditions in the upper half. We collected seed from low, mid and high elevations and grew them in climate chambers under the characteristic temperatures at these three elevations. Growth of all species was reduced under lower temperatures along both halves of the gradient. We found consistent genetically based differences in growth over the upper elevational gradient, with plants from high-elevation sites growing more slowly than those from mid-elevation ones, while the pattern in the lower part of the gradient was more mixed. Our data suggest that many non-native plants might respond to climate along elevational gradients by genetically based changes in key traits, especially at higher elevations where low temperatures probably impose a stronger selection pressure. At lower elevations, where anthropogenic influences are greater, higher gene flow and frequent disturbance might favour genotypes with broad ecological amplitudes. Thus the importance of evolutionary processes for invasion success is likely to be context-dependent.
KW - Biology
KW - Alien
KW - Elevational gradient
KW - Phenotypic plasticity
KW - Plant invasions
KW - Rapid evolution
KW - alien
KW - elevational gradient
KW - phenotypic plasticity
KW - plant invasions
KW - Rapid evolution
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84865588499&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - https://www.mendeley.com/catalogue/c3f2fd49-5adb-36de-8075-034a0e5598b8/
U2 - 10.1007/s00442-012-2291-2
DO - 10.1007/s00442-012-2291-2
M3 - Journal articles
C2 - 22434406
AN - SCOPUS:84865588499
VL - 170
SP - 89
EP - 99
JO - Oecologia
JF - Oecologia
SN - 0029-8549
IS - 1
ER -